Category Archives: Healthful Eating

Play it Safe

With warmer temperatures, cooks will be moving outdoors to the grills. Or taking advantage of fresh produce available from summer gardens. It’s a good time to review food safety, too.

Cleanliness in all areas is vital. Wash your hands frequently, and keep  your food prep area sanitized. (A spray bottle containing 1 part chlorine bleach to 10 parts water works well and is less expensive than sanitizing products).

The peels of some fruits and vegetables may contain trace amounts of pesticides, fertilizer, or bacteria. All fruits and vegetables should be washed before eating (even if you don’t eat the rind, as with a melon). Store produce separately from raw meats or fish. Wash produce under running water. Some berries will mold if you wash and store, so wait to wash berries until you’re ready to use them and store unwashed produce apart from washed.

Raw meats (including poultry) can contaminate produce, countertops, and utensils with harmful bacteria. To avoid cross-contamination, thoroughly wash all surfaces that come in contact with the meats, including knives. Use a separate (plastic or glass) cutting board for meats, something that can be washed in a dishwasher or hot soapy water.

Thaw frozen meat in the refrigerator and use within three days. Do not allow food to thaw at room temperature. Bacteria can grow rapidly. Cook all meat to a safe temperature. Use a cooking thermometer, especially on pork and poultry, which should never be undercooked.

When brewing iced tea, bring water to a boil. Sun tea can harbor harmful bacteria. If you have well water, have it checked every year to be sure it’s safe to drink. When in doubt (or after severe weather and power outages), boil water before using it.

If you follow basic food safety guidelines, you can enjoy a healthy, fun summer.

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Cream of the Crop

 
 
 
 
 

Today in the Hasty Tasty Meals Kitchen we’re experimenting with creamy textures. Real cream sauces with butter, cheeses, and/or heavy cream contain too much saturated fat. How can the health-conscious cook satisfy the “cream” tooth?

Products on the market available in any supermarket can help you make fake-out creamy sauces or soups. Fat free evaporated milk, fat free half & half (I prefer Land o’ Lakes brand), lowfat sour cream, Neufchatel cheese, and plain ol’ cornstarch work in recipes traditionally laden with butter and heavy cream and/or cheese.

Consider this crustless cherry cheesecake.

RECIPE

Cherry Cheese Dessert

Ingredients:

  • 12 ounces softened Neufchatel cheese (or lowfat cream cheese)
  • 1 large package sugar-free, fat-free instant vanilla pudding mix
  • 1 can no-sugar-added pie filling (I like cherry, but any will work)
  • 3 cups cold skim milk
  • 12 squares graham crackers, crushed

Directions:

  • In a blender, combine pudding mix and milk and mix just until blended. Add Neufchatel cheese. Mix until smooth and thick.
  • Pour mixture into a pie plate (or 8 individual parfait dishes).
  • Top with the pie filling. Refrigerate.
  • Before serving, sprinkle the crushed graham crackers evenly over the top. Scoop into individual dessert bowls.

Makes 8 lowfat servings of a delicious dessert. You won’t miss the fat or the sugar!

You can make your own cream soups, too. Here is a recipe for fish chowder, but you can vary it by substituting clams, shrimp, additional potatoes, corn, mushrooms, chicken, or whatever kind of creamy soup you want to make.

RECIPE

Fish Chowder

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup diced potato
  • 1 small onion, diced
  • 1 cup celery, thinly sliced
  • ½ cup bell pepper, diced
  • 1 cup fish, any kind, coarsely chopped
  • 1 10 oz can chicken broth or stock (or bouillon dissolved in 10 oz. water)
  • 2 cups fat free half-and-half (or 2 small cans evaporated skim milk)
  • 2 Tablespoons cornstarch
  • 1 Tablespoon fresh thyme or 1 tsp. dried thyme
  • 1 handful fresh parsley, chopped

Directions:

  • Using a 3-quart pan over medium heat, dry-sauté onion, celery, and bell pepper (or you may spray bottom of pan with nonstick spray)
  • After about 3 minutes, add broth and potatoes
  • Dissolve the cornstarch in the half-and-half, then add the mixture to the pan
  • Add fish. Cover pan, reduce heat to a low simmer, and cook for about 15 minutes or until fish and potatoes are tender.
  • Remove from heat. Add herbs. Stir and serve.

Makes about two bowls or 4 cups. 

Make mock sour cream by blending lowfat cottage cheese with lemon juice, or adding artificial sweetener to plain nonfat yogurt. Cottage cheese blended with skim milk and seasonings makes a light cream sauce for pasta dishes. Here’s a recipe for easy cheese sauce. I use a Vita-mix but you can also make it in a skillet.

RECIPE

Cheese Sauce in the Vita-mix®

Ingredients:

  • 2 Tablespoons cornstarch
  • 2 cups skim milk
  • ½ tsp. sea salt
  • 12 oz reduced-fat cheddar cheese, cubed or shredded*

Directions:

  • Add milk and salt to Vita-mix container. Cover but leave plug in middle of cap open.
  • On the lowest setting, run the Vita-mix while adding cornstarch through opening in cover.
  • Replace cover plug. Gradually increase the speed to High. Run 3-4 minutes or until steaming
  • Stop Vita-mix. Remove cover plug. Add the cheese through opening in cover.
  • Run Vita-mix (start low, stepping up to High) for one minute or until cheese is completely blended.
  • Turn off Vita-mix and immediately pour cheese sauce over its intended dish (macaroni, taco salad, etc.)

*Any lowfat cheese works with this recipe

To adapt this recipe to the skillet, just remember to dissolve the cornstarch in cold milk then heat to boiling to thicken. Cornstarch doesn’t dissolve easily in warm liquid. Use a whisk to thicken the milk then a wooden spoon to blend in the cheese.

One last word on creamstyle cooking: Cream based soups or cream sauced foods don’t keep well in the freezer. It’s better to freeze what you want to save for later and then add the creamy textures to the dish right before serving. As you experiment in your kitchen, you’ll find more ways to fake the fatty creams, butter, and cheeses in your own dishes.

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Filed under desserts, Fish, Healthful Eating, Recipes, Soups & Stews

WEIGHT WATCHERS IN 20 MINUTES

I collect cookbooks, and I picked up one yesterday that fits my hasty tasty meals philosophy: Weight Watchers® in 20 minutes (Wiley Publishing, Inc., Hoboken, NJ ©2009).  It retails for $29.95 USA but I found it on sale.

If you’re a follower of the Weight Watchers® program, you’ll find the Points® value posted for each recipe an added convenience.  It’s printed in my preferred format, a spiral bound book that lies flat for easy reference while cooking.  Weight Watchers® in 20 minutes includes 250 recipes including ten that use the “cooking ahead” method (or what I call creative leftovers) in which you cook one food that pulls double duty. Robin Miller, of Food Network’s Quick Fix Meals would approve, I’ll bet.

For example, a meal of Kielbasa with Peppers and Onions today morphs into Sausage and Red Bean Gumbo tomorrow.  Each recipe serves 4 and can be halved or doubled, as needed.  Plus–and this was, again, right up my ally–several recipes are for the pressure cooker, such as Moroccan-Style Lamb or Honey and Spice Porridge.  These are not your routine recipes, yet they’re simple and fast.

If you’re in the market for a healthful meals cookbook, try Weight Watchers® in 20 minutes.  Tonight we’re having, New Orleans–Style Chicken, my first try from this collection.  I look forward to it!

 

 

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Happy New Year Hummus

Are you entertaining guests this new year’s eve or new year’s day?  Looking for something different yet traditional?  I found a great recipe that satisfies the need to stick to tradition (greens, black eye peas, pork, and sweet potatoes are considered good luck foods here in the south) yet isn’t the usual fare: black eye pea hummus.  Sounds odd, but it’s delicious.

RECIPE

Black eye Pea Hummus

Ingredients:

  • 4 sprigs fresh cilantro
  • 4 sprigs fresh parsley
  • 1 small sweet onion, quartered
  • ½ cup chopped celery
  • ½ cup roasted red pepper
  • ¼ cup tahini
  • ½ teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1 teaspoon sea salt
  • zest of one lemon
  • 2 teaspoons balsamic vinegar
  • 2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
  • 1 teaspoon low-sodium soy sauce
  • 3 cups cooked and drained blackeye peas (or you can use 2 small cans, rinsed and drained)
  • pepper to taste

Directions:

In a food processor (I use the Vita-mix), coarsely chop the cilantro, parsley, and onion.  Add all remaining ingredients and blend (5-6 on the Vita-mix) until smooth.  Serve hummus with fresh vegetables for dipping, spread on endive leaves, and/or toasted pita bread wedges.

How’s that for fusion cooking?  The southern U.S. meets the Middle East!  This is a healthful appetizer full of fiber and flavor (Those living in the southwest can substitute Anasazi beans for black eye peas for a different fusion hummus).

Happy new year!

Cheryl

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